Of course not. If anything, the session’s design subverted
that task.
Havard’s predilection for government spending
more usually puts him in league with Democrats, and around the House of Representatives
several from that party during the session complained that GOP plans to address
a potential fiscal year 2019 shortfall rested on a partial, temporary extension
of the 2016 sales tax hike. They said not to pursue a permanent tax increase
did not achieve “tax reform.”
But the session call, authored by Democrat Gov. John Bel Edwards, purposely did not lend itself to accomplishing tax reform, much less the larger goal of fiscal reform. It included a narrow range of options that prevented any meaningful comprehensive reform from occurring. Further, state government has next to no information concerning an important reform option: which of hundreds of exceptions to keep and which to jettison.
Finally, Democrats in particular hopelessly
conflated tax reform with tax increases. Ideally, tax reform must
operate as the end, not as a means to a different end of separating more money
from its earners, staying revenue neutral insofar as changes to marginal
rates and exceptions. Broadening the base while lowering rates and slashing
bureaucracy and regulation would produce tax revenue growth organically, not through
taking a greater proportion of what people earn but by spurring increased
economic activity.
Unfortunately, the latest
study attempting to chart a path to such reform bought into the ethos of
tax reform as a bridge to taking more of the people’s money. While it makes
some good suggestions, this underlying philosophy contaminates its usefulness
as a holistic tool to pursue genuine tax reform. And, because it never
addressed structural spending reforms, it’s next to useless as a guide for
fiscal reform.
Nonetheless, Democrats held it out as a model worth
following – particularly as it argued for permanent changes. They argued that
the expiring sales tax hike should had bought time to implement the report’s
recommendations, thus extending it temporarily made no progress towards “tax
reform.”
Again, this presents an entirely disingenuous conclusion.
As genuine reform must incorporate revenue neutrality and not serve as an
excuse to raise taxes, given the scope of the session call, time frame, and lack
of information about policy options, it would have been reckless for the Legislature
to make permanent changes under these conditions. Altering the tax code in this
fashion and terming it “reform” is like painting stripes on a horse and calling
it a zebra.
Given the circumstances, a temporary tax extension
would do the least harm to the economy and body politic. That may not please
those who disdain comprehensive fiscal reform and desire inflated government,
but neither do they have the best interests of Louisianans at heart.
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